It is Latin for "those things that were under his control and were escaping."
Depending on how you interpret amissae,"Cleopatra wept on account of the letter which had been lost".or"Cleopatra wept on account of the letter which had been sent away".
In Latin, quae is a feminine or neuter form of the interrogative pronoun quis, quid or the relative pronoun qui, quae, quod. Translations, depending on context, include "who", "which", "what" and "that".In World of Warcraft, Quae is a level 38 female humanoid in the Arathi highlands.
This would be translated: "There is no power on the earth which compares..."
But I wish to see a bear that leaps
the grammarian Philemon has written: 'Quae supersunt vulgatis et emendatiora et auctiora' 'Quae supersunt vulgatis et emendatiora et auctiora' 'Quae supersunt vulgatis et emendatiora et auctiora' 'Quae supersunt vulgatis et emendatiora et auctiora'
Quae outermost risit as best one can risit
Some little typos in the previous answer.Deus, dona mihi serenitatemaccipere res quae non possum mutare,fortitudinem mutare res quae possum,atque sapientiam differentiam cognoscere.
What can be the pleasure of life when friendships are removed.
The word sought is possibly :quay - (pronounced like key) a dock or wharfquake - short form of earthquakequeue - (pronounced Q) a waiting line
Antonio Meneghelli has written: 'Index Francisci Petrarchae epistolarum quae editae sunt et quae adhuc ineditae' 'Notizie biografiche di Isabella Albrizzi nata Teotochi'
The motto of Minas Gerais is 'Libertas Quae Sera Tamen '.
The sentence 'Vir clarus manu sua dextra urbem quae in montibus fuit defenderat' is in Latin. In the word-by-word translation, the noun 'vir' means 'man'. The adjective 'clarus' means 'distinguished'. The noun 'manu' means 'hand'. The adjectives 'sua' and 'dextra' respectively mean 'his' and 'right'. The noun 'urbem' means 'city'. The word 'quae' means 'which'. The preposition 'in' means 'in'. The noun 'montibus' means 'the mountains'. The verb 'fuit' means '[he/she/it] was'; and the verb 'defenderat' means '[he/she/it] defended'. The English meaning therefore is as follows: With his right hand, the distinguished man defended the city which was in the mountains.